Saturday, June 21, 2014, 11:34 AM - With a season full of summertime stars beckoning, take a couple minutes to watch the time lapse video above.

Night sky panorama photography is tricky to pull off: To get the kind of perspective like what you see above, you need four cameras shooting simultaneously, in long-exposures, then you have to cobble them all together to come up with the funky-looking distorted image.

Which is exactly what Michigan-based photographer Vincent Brady, specializes in. After shooting a breathtaking series of shots over the last few years, he only just recently rolled them all into into the incredible show-stopper you see up there.

"I created a custom rig of four cameras with fisheye lenses to capture the entire night-sky in motion," Brady says. "Thus the images show the stars rotating around the north star as well as the effect of the southern pole as well and a 360 degree panorama of the scene on Earth. Each camera is doing nonstop long exposures, typically about 1 minute consecutively for the life of the camera battery. Usually about three hours. I then made a script to stitch all the thousands of these panoramas into this time-lapse."